Pronoun,<span> in English, the </span>part of speech<span> used as a substitute for an antecedent noun that is clearly understood, and with which it agrees in person, </span>number<span>, and </span>gender<span>. In English the pronouns are classified as personal ( </span>I, we, you, thou, he, she, it, they<span> ), demonstrative ( </span>this, these, that, those<span> ), relative ( </span>who, which, that, as<span> ), indefinite (e.g., </span>each, all, everyone, either, one, both, any, such, somebody<span> ), interrogative ( </span>who, which, what<span> ), possessive, sometimes termed possessive adjectives ( </span>my, your, his, her, our, their<span> ), and reflexive (e.g., </span>myself, herself<span> ). The </span>case<span> of the pronoun depends upon its function in the sentence structure.</span>
First, we cancel out C, it specifically said that she <em>wasn't </em>aplied. Lazy? maybe... She obviously isn't very studious but that does not automatically means lazy. Serious? Well... It never really says anything about seriousness. Honestly, it is a pretty cr*ppy question but hey, that's English class for ya. The only one that works is D. Diligent. Now, it might be lazy, because it says that she never studies, but the paragraph ends with her finding a new passion and how she loves to cook. So that is not particularly lazy. Tell me if I was right or not, and I hope this helped.